NEW JUDICIARY SYSTEM: LEGISLATORS AS JUDGES See Editorial Page Stgan Ia 4 CLOUDY High-58 Low-34 A little warmer with low probability of rain Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVH, No. 40 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY OCTOBER 18, 1966 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES Senate Assembly Approves Resolutions Concerning U' -H AC Disclosure Question Group Asks Protection of Free Speech U' Compliance With HUAC's Subpoena Raises Five Issues Yesterday's report of the Ad Hoc Committee on the Question of SDisclosure ended its chronological review and analysis of the Univer- sity's compliance with tl}e House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities subpoena of membership lists by concluding that the Uni- versity community "must find remedies to prevent the reptition of actions that erode the basic freedoms of association and dis- sent." The review raised five main issues: " "Freedom of Association and dissent." The report charges that' administrators gave "no explicit consideration to any threat to the civil liberties of those" whose names were sent in to HUAC, "to the autonomy of the University, or to the basic freedoms of the Uni- versity." Disclosure of Membership The report states that the dis- k closure of membership and spon- sorship constitutes a threat to the "climate of freedom on cam- pus. These associations . . . should be confidential and should not be disclosed." " "Confidentiality of member- ship and sponsorship." Althowgi 4 "published policy" regardingmeni- bership lists appears to put them in the public domain, the report states, "established practice pro- vides a basis for the opposite view." The report adds that there were dangers in disclosing the member- t ship lists to HUAC because these lists "were not verified for accu- racy, some persons were not aware that their names appeared on the lists, and that some of the spon- sors were associating themselves with the desirability only of the existence of the organization and not of their purpose." Consultation * "Consultation with faculty and student government." The re- port said "the way in which the decision was made demonstrates the inadequacy of faculty and stu- dent participation in decision making on University issues." It charges that "the machinery for consultation existed but was not used" by the administration when it made its decision. " "Legal consultation." In an apparent reference to an argument used by President Harlan Hatcher, the report charges that "the argu- ment that the decision to comply with the subpoena is justified be- cause the University must 'obey the law' begs the question." It adds that the University "fre- quently fights for its rights in court . . ." and was able to do so with the issue of complying with the HUAC subpoena. The report suggests, that the University could also have explored practical al- ternatives to compliance, such as negotiations with HUAC. * "Communications." The 're- port states that the University should have informed those named on the submitted lists as soon as the decision to comply was made to give them the "right to decide what action they might undertake on their own behalf." * * * * * * * * * * * * Text of Committee Report on Disclosure Question (The following is the text of the report prepared by the Ad Hoc Committee on the Disclosure Question. Except for exclusion of two introductory paragraphs de- lineating the charge of the com- mittee, the text presented here is complete.) Narrative of Events Early in the afternoon of Thursday, August 4, 1966, an in- vestigator for the House Un- American Activities Committee appeared at the Office of Student Affairs and asked what records of student organizations were kept by the University. He was told that the University kept partial lists of members, but released, on request, only the name of an or- ganization's president. The in- vestigator asked to see the lists, and was told that he could not. He then produced a subpoena, and was referred to the Vice President for Student Affairs, Richard L. Cutler. Mr. Cutler, on his way to an appointment with President Hatcher. asked the investigator if he could wait,: and he agreed to do so. During his meeting with President Hatcher, Mr. Cutler mentioned the subpoena, saying that he intended to consult others as to the University's proper re- sponse to it. On his return to his office, Mr. Cutler accepted the'subpoena for the- "Director, Student Organiza- tions- and Activities, University of Michigan." Mr. Duncan Sells, Di- rector of Student Organizations, was then absent from the office and did not learn of the subpoena until the next day. The subpoena asked that the person named pro- vide the House Un-American Ac- tivities Committee, at 10:00 a.m., August 16, 1966, with "copies of certificates or statements of membership filed with the Uni- versity of Michigan for the pur- pose of obtaining status as an ac- credited campus organization" by eight named organizations. Mem- bership lists of three of these were on file. (The DuBois Club and VOICE had recognition. The Committee to Aid the Vietnamese had, in fact, not yet been rec- ognized.) The investigator told Mr. Cutler that compliance by mail was acceptable. .On Friday afternoon, August 5, after consulting with Mr. Sells, Mr. Cutler telephoned Allan F. Smith, Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs, and told him about the subpoena. On Monday, August 8, President Hatcher left Ann Arbor for two weeks at his summer home at Leland..By his later statement, he assumed that the lists would be sent because of the subpoena's legality. On Tuesday, August 9, the vice presidents of the University met for their weekly breakfast confer- ence, Marvin L. Niehuss, Executive Vice President, presiding. No one had yet informed Mr. Niehuss of the subpoena, and it did not come up at this meeting. That after- noon, Mr. Cutler told Mr. Niehus of the subpoena, and Mr. Niehuss called a special meeting for Wed- nesday. The vice presidents met at 1:30 p.m., Wednesday, August 10, Mr.' Niehuss presiding. Present were Messrs. Cutler and Smith, Wilbur K. Pierpont (Vice President in charge of Business and Finance). Jack H. Hamilton (Assistant to Mr. Michael Radock, Vice Presi- dent for Unversity Relations), and Paul G. Kauper (Professor of Law), whom Mr. Niehuss had in- vited shortly before the meeting to NEWS WIRE Late World News By Te Associated Press HONOLULU-THE STATE Civil Defense organization was preparing last night to put the state of Hawaii on alert for a tidal wave which was expected to reach island shores shortly after midnight. Civil Defense spokesman John Carew said that it could not yet be determined whether wave action will be "large or small." He said all that was known was that the tidal wave gauge at La Punta, Peru is not normal. It was not known what precautions would be taken so far as President Johnson is' concerned. The President and Mrs. Johnson have a suite in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Waikiki, which faces on to the Pacific Ocean. ALL TEACHING FELLOWS are invited to attend a collo- quium sponsored by Graduate Student Council on "The Role of the Teaching Fellow" at 4 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Participants in the discussion will include Dean Stephen Spurr of the graduate school, Vice-President for Academic Af- fairs Allan Smith and Dean William Haber of the literary college. * * * LATE PERMISSION for freshmen and sophomore women will extend closing hours to 2:30 this weekend because of Homecoming. present the general constitutional and legal background. Messrs. Cutler and Smith assumed that the list would not be sent, because of their confidentiality; Mr. Nie- huss that the lists would be sen, because of the subpoena's legality. The vice presidents agreed that challenging the subpoena would require Regental approval, and that if the lists were confidential they would seek such approval. Mr. Cutler agreed to look up the statement supporting confiden- tiality. The consensus of the meeting was that the University would and could resist the sub- poena to some degree. The ques- tion of potential threats to the University's autonomy, to its basic freedoms of opinion and discus- sion, or to the civil liberties of in- dividuals did not arise. Nor was there discussion of consultation with constituted faculty or stu- dent groups, or with outside legal counsel. Mr. Smith left imme- diately after the meeting for a speaking engagement in.Midland. During the afternoon (Wednes- day, August 10), Mr. Niehuss tele- phoned Wayne State University and The University of Wisconsin. ,Both told him that they kept only public lists of the officers of stu- dents' organizations, and that they had ilot been subpoened. On August 10 or 11, The University of California, Berkeley, was called; it was learned that they also kept only lists of officers in a public booklet, that they had been sub- poened, and that they had re- sponded by sending the public booklet. (Associate Dean Eldon R. Nonnamaker of Michigan State University informed us that the investigator for the House Un- American Activities Committee had approached him on or about August 4, inquiring as to what lists were kept, and that he had directed the investigator to the bookstore where a booklet listing officers of students' groups could be bought for $1.00. Michigan State received no subpoena. Of- ficials of The University of Mich- igan made no inquiry of Michigan State.) On Thursday, August 11, at 11:00 a.m., Mr. Niehuss presided at a meeting of Messrs. Cutler and Pierpont, Mr. A. Geoffrey Norman (Vice President for Research), Mr. Herbert W. Hildebrandt (As- sistant to the President and Sec- retary of the University), Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Sells, and Mr. John C. Feldkamp (Assistant to the Vice President for Student Af- fairs). Messrs. Cutler and Feld- kamp had been unable to find a printed authority for confiden- tiality. (A committee of Office of Student Affairs staff members proposed, in May of 1966, a gen- eral policy which apparently would have made membership lists public, but this policy had not been officially adopted by that office. Student Government Coun- cil revised its recognition proce- Aures in 1965 to make such lists confidential for the use only of the Student Government Council President; these revisions are still in galley proof, and have never been published or employed as operating procedure. The 1961 edition of the Regulations, be- lieved by most officers to be the applicable rules, has been out of print for several months and is not generally available or con- sulted.) Mr. Feldkamp outlined the pro- cedures for recognizing students' organizations, pointing out that groups seeking official recognition present lists (officers, faculty sponsors, and twenty members) to the Student Government Council in "open meeting." (The lists are, in fact, treated as confidential both by the Student Government Council and the Office of Student Organizations.) In the light of the previous day's discussion, those present at Thursday's meeting concluded that they had no alter- native but to comply with the subpoena., (The first seven of the fol- lowing are printed as they were passed yesterday by the Senate Assembly. Action on the eighth resolution was post- poned.) Be it resolved that: 1) It is the sense of the As- sembly that the University has had a distinguished record of maintaining freedom of asso- ciation and dissent; that in the light of this record, the re- sponse - in method and sub- stance-to the House Un-Amer- ican Activities Committee sub- poena is regrettable; and that the freedoms of association and dissent should be maintained in the future. 2) It is the sense of the As- sembly that no official records relating to political convictions and associations of students and faculty should be kept within the University community, ex- cept that officers of recognized organizations may be required to make a public declaration of their identity. 3) It is the sense of the As- sembly that effective decision making in the University re- quires continual and close con- sultation among students, fac- ulty and administrative offi- cers, and prompt and adequate 'communication within the Uni- versity community. We move that: 4) The Assembly establish a Civil Liberties Board composed of five persons, one each ap- pointed by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Af- fairs from the membership of the Subcommittees on Educa- tional Policies, Student Rela- tions, and University Relations, and one each chosen by Stu- dent Government Council and Graduate Student Council from their membership; this Board shall consult with and advise the University administration, and may assist persons who, in their roles as students or staff, suffer threats to their civil lib- erties. 5) The Assembly charge the Civil Liberties Board with de- termining current record-keep- ing rules and practices through- out the University; with de- termining what information is needed, and how long it needs to be kept; and with formulat- ing a recommended University policy for faculty and admin- istrative officers on inquiries from outside the University concerning students and fac- ulty. 6) The Assembly urges the University administration that in matters concerning the civil liberties of students and fac- ulty, it make full use of all ex- pert legal advice available, and when necessary, obtain assist- ance from law firms specializ- ing in the field; and that legal assistance be made available when requested by the Civil Liberties Board. 7) The Assembly request the President of the University to join with presidents of other universities in the establish- ment of regular procedures for consultation, notification and concerted action to meet po- tential threats to the freedoms of association and dissent or to otherdcivil liberties of stu- dents and faculty. 8) The Assembly work to es- tablish a University Executive Committee, consisting of facul- ty members, to participate in the making of administrative decisions bearing directly on the educational functions of the University as a whole with du- ties and responsibilities com- parable to those of the Execu- tive Committee of the various Colleges, Schools. and Depart ments._ members, underwriting the stu- dents' right to organize in support of any belief, "whether or not we agree with their opinions." The documents of three organizations sent - the DuBois Club, VOICE, the Committee to Aid the Viet- namese-contained a total of 68 distinct names: 51 students, 14 faculty members, 3 non-students. Some names appeared on more than one list. (The widely quoted figure of 65 presumably omits the three non-students.) On Friday, August 12, Mr. Cutler redrafted the letter of notifica- tion. and set his staff to finding current addresses; many of the students were not in residence dur- ing Term III. He decided to send all the letters at once rather than one by one, and decided not to notify The Michigan Daily of compliance to the subpoena prior to notifying the people involved, in spite of the fact that because The Daily would cease publication with its Saturday edition he risked be- irig charged with evading publicity. On Sunday, August 14, Mr. Cut- ler read in a newspaper that the House Un - American Activities Committee had scheduled hearings beginning August 16 (the hearings had been first reported in the New York Times on August 8.) He then decided to speed up the process of notification, and the next morning the letters were sent air mail spe- cial delivery. The next morning, Monday, August 15, Mr. Cutler also left a telephone message at Leland ask- ing President Hatcher to call him back so that he could inform the President of the decision. In the afternoon, Mr. Hamilton issued a brief press release, and also noti- fied by telephone Governor Rom- ney's office, Representative Viv- ian's office, and the Ann Arbor and Detroit branches of the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union. At 11:00 a i., Tuesday, August 16, four VOICE members we.it to the Administration Building to ob- tain further information. They were referred to Mr. Smith, who met with them, with Mr. Cutler present. Messrs. Smith and Cutler agreed to write a statement de- scribing what had occurred. The students believe that there was, the two vice presidents that there was not, an agreement to consult the Regents on a statement con- cerning the House Un-American Activities Committee. Several fac- ulty members also discussed the decision with the two vice presi- dents, and requested a public statement from them. On Wednesday, August 17, var- ious VOICE members sought un- successfully to, reach Messrs. were working on the statement, President Hatcher returned Mr. Culter's call of the 15th. They agreed that the President's 1 ame should not be associated with the statement since he had had no part in the decision. The statement, issued as a "Re- port to the University Commun- ity," was distributed at 2:00 p.m. at Mr. Smith's office. Those sit- ting-in there decided that the statement was wanting in answers to critical questions, and that they would stay in Mr. Smith's office until given a personal interview. Messrs. Smith and Cutler came to the office and arranged a discus- sion, which lasted four aud one- half hours and was frequently heated. Beginning Friday, August 19, in- dividuals and several informal groups, some student, some fac- ulty, held meeting on the issues; letters were written to, officers of the University and to the Ann Arbor News expressing alarm over what was viewed as the Univer- sity's lack of concern for the issues. VOICE circulated an an- swer to the vice presidents' "Re- port to the University Commun- ity,"' and several members of the fatulty petitioned the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs to establish this Ad Hoc Committee. On August 29, the SACUA Sub- committee on Student Relations passed a motion regretting both the substance and the manner of compliance. The motion was sent to SACUA for approval and trans- mission to the Faculty Assembly. Subsequently, several faculties of the University have discussed or passed resolutions critical of aspects of the University's re- sponse. President Hatcher has twice spoken in public in defense of the University's action, which the Regents have also supported at their public meeting on Friday, September 16, 1966. Supplementary I Information Students' Organizations The University encourages stu- dents to organize groups "consist- ent with the broad educational goals of the University" (Regula- tions, 1961, published by the Of- fice of Student Affairs). Non-stu- dents, including faculty members and people in no way connected with the University, can be, and are, members. The University rec- ognizes approximately 290 student groups, divided into eight categor- ies by the Office of Student Or- ganizations, one of which is "Poli- tical Parties and Discussion Grous." dent organizations, only referenees to recognition "under the genferal regulations approved by the ap- propriate University authorities" (Section 8.11A, page 43b). How- ever, the ability to recognize stu- dent organizations was delegated to the Student Government.Coun- cil In the Regents' proceedings that established that group. The Student Government Council pass- es rules that stand unless vetoed by the vice-president for student affairs. The Office of Student Af- fairs then publishes these- rules in a booklet entitled University Regulations Concerning Student Organizations. This booklet, last published in 1961 and now out of print and generally unavailable, specifies two ways in Which a group may quali- fy for recognition by the Student Government Council: (1) submit- ting a list of 20 members, or (2) submitting "a statement ;which lists those of its prospective mem-j bers who wish to be listed" and attests that there are 20 Univer- sity students who are prospective members. No group, apparently, has ever used this second proced- ire; until recent weeks It remain- ed unknown both to the present staff in the Office of Student Af- fairs and to the present members of Student Government Council. This booklet mentions neither the confidentiality nor the public na- ture of these organizational docu- ments. In recent years, the practice of recognizing students' organizations hs been that: (1) an organization files its request-naming officers, faculty sponsor, and 20 of its members (the naies of members that first come to the petitioners' minds, apparently),-with the Of- fice of Student Organizations, this being the convenient repository; (2) the Student Government Council, at its next meeting con- siders these requests; (3) failing a majority vote to the contrary, the organization is recognized, and the list is returned to the Office of Student Organizations for ap- propriate filing. At this open meeting, the list is not made avail- able to anyone but members of the Student Government Council. At the outset of each academic year, the Office of Student, Or- ganizations sends each recognized group a form for "Membership Report," asking for the names of 20 current members and the cur- rent faculty sponsor. The Office of Student Affairs uses these lists (1) to check grade- pointaverages of officers, since officers must maintain a 2.0 av- erage, and (2) to record extra- curricular activities on the "Per- sonal Record" it maintains on Recommends Safeguards For Dissent Establishes Advisory Student-Faculty Panel For Civil Liberties By PATRICA O'DONOHUE The faculty Senate . Assembly yesterday approved seven pro- posals pertaining to the preserva- tion of civil liberties on campus and to the University's recent sub- mission of student organization membership lists wO the House Un- American Activities Committee. The resolutions expressed regret at the HUAC incident, established a student-faculty civil liberties board, and recommended proce- dures designed to guarantee pro- tection of freedom of association and dissent at the University. The proposals were adopted "without significant dissent," ac- cording to Prof. James Wendel, chairman of the Ad Hoc Commit- tee on the Question of Disclosure. Wendel's committee presented the proposals to the assembly along with a report on the HUAC in- cident. Of the seven proposals adopted. only one was substantially changed from the form in which it was submitted by the 'committee. Ac- tion on an eight 'committee pro- posal was 'postponed indefinitely. University administrators con- t;cted last night said they will Withhold comment on the faculty's action until they have an oppor- tunity to study the proposals and the accompanying report. Three of the seven proposals were resolutions expressing "the sense of the Assembly." They state that: -The University's compliance with the HUAC subpoena was "re- grettable." -"No official records relating to political convictions and associa- tions of students and faculty should be kept within the Univer- sity community, except that offi- cers of recognized organizations may be required to make a public declaration of their identity," and -Decision making at the Uni- versity requires "continual and close consultation among students, faculty and administrative officers. The second of these resolutions originally stated that offical rec- ords relating to the political con- victions and associations of stu- dents and faculty should "be pre- sumed to be confidential and that, should disclosure become unad- voidable, those concerned 'be promptlynotified." Wendel said this was. changed because a majority of the Assem- bly's members wanted offical rec- ognition of student organizations to be based on filing standing rec- ords. The remaining four proposals were motions and now stand as legislation. Two .of these established the civil liberties board, which would consult with and advise the ad- ministration and may "assist per- sons who, in their roles as students or staff, suffer threats to their civil liberties." It is to be composed of five members, three appointed by SACUA and one each by Student Government Council and Gradu- ate Student Council. The board is charged with "de- termining current record-keeping rules and practices throughout the University; with determining what Information is needed, and how long it needs to be kept; and with formulating a recommended Uni- versity policy for faculty and ad- ministrative officers on inquiries from outside the University con- cerning students and faculty." The faculty assembly also urged the administration to obtain "all legal advice available" when con- fronted with a civil liberties case and asked that "legal assistance be made available when requested by the civil liberties board." Finally, the assembly requested the University president to "join WASHINGTON SPEECH: Vivian Rejects Viet Escalation Rep. Wes Vivian (D-Ann Arbor) with far-reaching repercussions in yesterday rejected both immediate, Southeast Asia." unconditional withdrawal from "At the same time," Vivian Viet Nam, and continued escala- said, "continued escalation or in- tion of the level of hostilities, as tensification of the war carries viable approaches toward settle- with it dangers equally grave. ment of the conflict. Such escalation contributes to tre- mendous destruction, to increas- In a speech before the House of ing misery and poverty, to increas- Representatives, Vivian asserted ingly severe casualties, loss of lives, that the only way out of the pres- and bombing of villages by error.", an instrument to induce negotia- tion." * Assurance to all parties to the conflict "of a seat at any negotia- ting table." * Commitment to the phased withdrawal of American forces. * Pursuit of "a neutral role for Viet Nam," internationally guar- anteed, with participation by an . I I I